Reviewing initiatives to promote sustainable supply chains: The case of forest-risk commodities

The continued growth in demand for a relatively small number of agricultural and forest commodities in global trade has placed increasing pressures on forests across landscapes in the tropics and sub-tropics. These pressures are amplified by growing domestic demand in producing countries. Such trends have led to multiple environmental challenges linked to loss of forests and biodiversity and rising carbon emissions. They also create social challenges including threats to local food security, tenure rights and the livelihoods of indigenous peoples and local communities. Expansion of trade in forest-risk commodities over the past three decades has resulted in increased pressure from civil society organizations, consumers, international banks and shareholders of consumer goods companies to develop and implement a diverse array of instruments and tools to promote sustainable or deforestation-free sourcing, and as a way to reduce exposure to reputational, financial and regulatory risks. Multi-stakeholder platforms and commodity roundtables also emerged, in response to criticisms of government failures. The multiplication of sustainability initiatives has been driven by the growing complexity and diversity of conditions under which agri-food and timber supply chains operate. Private sector actors have increasingly defined and monitored their own sustainability performance by using certification standards or by developing their own procedures and criteria. More recently, a discernible shift toward landscape or jurisdictional approaches is seen as a way to meet sustainability goals. The growing complexity of policy regimes, inevitably, results in ambiguities and can lead to tradeoffs between gains and losses. This review presents a synthesis of the multiple public, private and hybrid governance initiatives that aim to promote sustainable supplies of key forest-risk commodities. It aims to make it easier to understand a vast and rapidly expanding literature. By drawing on the published literature and scientific discussions, including the recent FTA 2020 Science Conference, the review highlights some of the outstanding challenges that urgently need to be addressed in order to achieve the targeted impacts.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wardell, D.A., Piketty, M-G., Lescuyer, G., Pacheco, P.
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: CGIAR Research Program on Forests, Trees and Agroforestry (FTA) 2021-02-25
Subjects:supply chain, forest products, commodities, forest policy,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/111791
https://www.cifor.org/library/7944
https://doi.org/10.17528/cifor/007944
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1117912023-12-08T19:25:22Z Reviewing initiatives to promote sustainable supply chains: The case of forest-risk commodities Wardell, D.A. Piketty, M-G. Lescuyer, G. Pacheco, P. supply chain forest products commodities forest policy The continued growth in demand for a relatively small number of agricultural and forest commodities in global trade has placed increasing pressures on forests across landscapes in the tropics and sub-tropics. These pressures are amplified by growing domestic demand in producing countries. Such trends have led to multiple environmental challenges linked to loss of forests and biodiversity and rising carbon emissions. They also create social challenges including threats to local food security, tenure rights and the livelihoods of indigenous peoples and local communities. Expansion of trade in forest-risk commodities over the past three decades has resulted in increased pressure from civil society organizations, consumers, international banks and shareholders of consumer goods companies to develop and implement a diverse array of instruments and tools to promote sustainable or deforestation-free sourcing, and as a way to reduce exposure to reputational, financial and regulatory risks. Multi-stakeholder platforms and commodity roundtables also emerged, in response to criticisms of government failures. The multiplication of sustainability initiatives has been driven by the growing complexity and diversity of conditions under which agri-food and timber supply chains operate. Private sector actors have increasingly defined and monitored their own sustainability performance by using certification standards or by developing their own procedures and criteria. More recently, a discernible shift toward landscape or jurisdictional approaches is seen as a way to meet sustainability goals. The growing complexity of policy regimes, inevitably, results in ambiguities and can lead to tradeoffs between gains and losses. This review presents a synthesis of the multiple public, private and hybrid governance initiatives that aim to promote sustainable supplies of key forest-risk commodities. It aims to make it easier to understand a vast and rapidly expanding literature. By drawing on the published literature and scientific discussions, including the recent FTA 2020 Science Conference, the review highlights some of the outstanding challenges that urgently need to be addressed in order to achieve the targeted impacts. 2021-02-25 2021-03-05T01:43:31Z 2021-03-05T01:43:31Z Working Paper Wardell, D.A., Piketty, M.G., Lescuyer, G. and Pacheco, P. 2021. Reviewing initiatives to promote sustainable supply chains: The case of forest-risk commodities. FTA Working Paper 8. Bogor, Indonesia: The CGIAR Research Program on Forests, Trees and Agroforestry (FTA). https://doi.org/10.17528/cifor/007944 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/111791 https://www.cifor.org/library/7944 https://doi.org/10.17528/cifor/007944 en FTA Working Paper CC-BY-4.0 Open Access 30p CGIAR Research Program on Forests, Trees and Agroforestry (FTA)
institution CGIAR
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country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
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tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic supply chain
forest products
commodities
forest policy
supply chain
forest products
commodities
forest policy
spellingShingle supply chain
forest products
commodities
forest policy
supply chain
forest products
commodities
forest policy
Wardell, D.A.
Piketty, M-G.
Lescuyer, G.
Pacheco, P.
Reviewing initiatives to promote sustainable supply chains: The case of forest-risk commodities
description The continued growth in demand for a relatively small number of agricultural and forest commodities in global trade has placed increasing pressures on forests across landscapes in the tropics and sub-tropics. These pressures are amplified by growing domestic demand in producing countries. Such trends have led to multiple environmental challenges linked to loss of forests and biodiversity and rising carbon emissions. They also create social challenges including threats to local food security, tenure rights and the livelihoods of indigenous peoples and local communities. Expansion of trade in forest-risk commodities over the past three decades has resulted in increased pressure from civil society organizations, consumers, international banks and shareholders of consumer goods companies to develop and implement a diverse array of instruments and tools to promote sustainable or deforestation-free sourcing, and as a way to reduce exposure to reputational, financial and regulatory risks. Multi-stakeholder platforms and commodity roundtables also emerged, in response to criticisms of government failures. The multiplication of sustainability initiatives has been driven by the growing complexity and diversity of conditions under which agri-food and timber supply chains operate. Private sector actors have increasingly defined and monitored their own sustainability performance by using certification standards or by developing their own procedures and criteria. More recently, a discernible shift toward landscape or jurisdictional approaches is seen as a way to meet sustainability goals. The growing complexity of policy regimes, inevitably, results in ambiguities and can lead to tradeoffs between gains and losses. This review presents a synthesis of the multiple public, private and hybrid governance initiatives that aim to promote sustainable supplies of key forest-risk commodities. It aims to make it easier to understand a vast and rapidly expanding literature. By drawing on the published literature and scientific discussions, including the recent FTA 2020 Science Conference, the review highlights some of the outstanding challenges that urgently need to be addressed in order to achieve the targeted impacts.
format Working Paper
topic_facet supply chain
forest products
commodities
forest policy
author Wardell, D.A.
Piketty, M-G.
Lescuyer, G.
Pacheco, P.
author_facet Wardell, D.A.
Piketty, M-G.
Lescuyer, G.
Pacheco, P.
author_sort Wardell, D.A.
title Reviewing initiatives to promote sustainable supply chains: The case of forest-risk commodities
title_short Reviewing initiatives to promote sustainable supply chains: The case of forest-risk commodities
title_full Reviewing initiatives to promote sustainable supply chains: The case of forest-risk commodities
title_fullStr Reviewing initiatives to promote sustainable supply chains: The case of forest-risk commodities
title_full_unstemmed Reviewing initiatives to promote sustainable supply chains: The case of forest-risk commodities
title_sort reviewing initiatives to promote sustainable supply chains: the case of forest-risk commodities
publisher CGIAR Research Program on Forests, Trees and Agroforestry (FTA)
publishDate 2021-02-25
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/111791
https://www.cifor.org/library/7944
https://doi.org/10.17528/cifor/007944
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